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  • The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine
  • July 28, 1866
  • Page 8
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, July 28, 1866: Page 8

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    Article RECOLLECTIONS OF THE LODGE OF FREEMASONS AT THORNHILL. ← Page 2 of 2
    Article RECOLLECTIONS OF THE LODGE OF FREEMASONS AT THORNHILL. Page 2 of 2
    Article LECTURE ON THE ORIGIN, NATURE, OBJECT, AND TENDENCY OF FREEMASONRY. Page 1 of 5 →
Page 8

Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Recollections Of The Lodge Of Freemasons At Thornhill.

Wo stand to our Queen , to our Master we bend ; For these are the rulers wo are bound to defend ; And when such a Queen , such a Master arise , As Britons , as Masons , we ' ve cause to rejoice . Then since we're bound by secresy to unity and love , Lot us like brethren faithful to every brother prove ;

Then hand to hand we'll firmly stand , all Masons in a ring , Protectors of our native land , the Craft , and tho Queen . Thus the semi-centennial demonstration Avas ended ; but its happy memories Avill long keep possession of each participant ' s heart . As to the

clothing of No . 252 , in addition to the ordinary badge , its officers wear a silk collar . The distinctive colour used to be dark blue , but in 1851 green was adopted . Green is the colour of the ribbon and clothing of the Grand Lodge of Scotland ; it is also the emblematic colour of a Knight

of the Red Cross ( a degree conferred m encampments of Knights Templars ) , and of a perfect Master ( the fifth degree in the Ancient Scottish Rite ) . The Red Cross Kni ght is reminded b y . ^ . is colour that truth is divine attributeand

a , lhat , like the green bay tree , it "will flourish in perpetual verdure . Blue is the colour of the clothing" of the Grand Lodges of England and Ireland . It is Said to be the appropriate colour

of the first three degrees of Ancient Craft Masonry , and has been explained as emblematic of Universal friendship and benevolence , instructing us that in the minds of Freemasons these virtues should be as extensive as the blue arch of heaven

itself . We are not aware of the circumstances under which the Lodge of Thornhill discarded blue as the colour of its livery . There is no mention of the change in the minutes . . . .

There have been " greater and lesser lights " among the representatives of St . John ' s'in Grand Lodge . Its first Proxy Master was , as Ave have already indicated , Bro . John Maitland , accountant , who Avas Assistant Grand Clerk from 1821 to 1837

and Grand Clerk from 1837 till his resignation of that office on his removal to London in 1846 . He relinquished his proxy commission in 1847 , and was succeeded by another distinguished brother , John Deuchar of Morningside , for several years

Grand Bible-bearer in the Grand Lodge of Scotland . F . D . M'Cowan , M . D ., a brother of considerable eminence , proved , during the years 1852-4 , aAvorthy successor to the brethren named , and AvithdreAv from the post on his election to the chair of Mary ' s Chapel , No . 1 . He is an ex-Grand Deacon , and Representative in Grand Lodge

Recollections Of The Lodge Of Freemasons At Thornhill.

from the Grand Orient of Fiance . Judging from his Masonic antecedents , Bro . F . Barrow of GlasgOAY is Avell qualified Avorthilyto sustain the prestige of St . John ' s , of AA'hich he is the present Proxy Master .

Of the five hundred candidates who have crossed the tesselated border in the Lodge of Thornhill , more than one-tenth have been brought to light by the present R . W . M ., now completing his second year of service in that capacity . No previous

R . W . M . of St . John ' s has put his mark upon so many blocks as Bro . A . C . Hislop ; and his work will stand long after he has been translated to the Celestial Lodge ., His mark is the pentalpha , ov , endless triangle with five points .

Lecture On The Origin, Nature, Object, And Tendency Of Freemasonry.

LECTURE ON THE ORIGIN , NATURE , OBJECT , AND TENDENCY OF FREEMASONRY .

DELIVERED TO THE BRETHREN OF THE LODGE OF LIGHTS ( NO . 148 ) , WARRINGTON , AFTER THE S . W . HAD DONE HIS DUTY ON MONDAY , THE 25 TH DAY OE JUNE , 1866 . Bg Bro . H . B . WHITE P . M . and Treas ., 148 , Prov . G .

StevMrd , WestBancasUre , K . T . S . P . B ., > fc 8 re . Brethren : At our last meeting , I announced my intention of giving , this evening , a lecture on the orig in , nature , object , and tendency of Freemasonry . I Avould not , however , have you to >

suppose that , iu the short space of time availablefor the purpose , I can do more than give you a general outline of the subject , Avhich is practically almost inexhaustible . I originally intended to deliver the lecture in open lodge , but , having received an intimation that a portion of it might by

some be deemed too nearly allied to a religious discussion to be there admissible , I have deferred it until after the ordinary duties of the evening are ended . Firstly , then , as to the origin of Freemasonry , I

can tell you positively nothing , and in this respect I believe I am not singular ; all sorts of conjectures have been hazarded as to the foundation of the system , but none are capable of proof , and I much question Avhether , if it could be proved Avhen '

Masonry was instituted , it Avould not at once loseone of its principal charms ; it ought and practicallymust suffice us to knoAV that it is excellent in itself , and has existed from time immemorial . Some enthusiasts make the Craft coeval with creation , and state that Adam received it direct

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1866-07-28, Page 8” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 24 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_28071866/page/8/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
THE CHIEF CORNER STONE. Article 1
RECOLLECTIONS OF THE LODGE OF FREEMASONS AT THORNHILL. Article 7
LECTURE ON THE ORIGIN, NATURE, OBJECT, AND TENDENCY OF FREEMASONRY. Article 8
SYMPATHY WITH ITALY. Article 12
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 12
THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 13
ROYAL MASONIC INSTITUTION FOR BOYS. Article 13
METROPOLITAN. Article 13
PROVINCIAL. Article 14
Untitled Article 14
ROYAL ARCH. Article 14
MARK MASONRY. Article 14
KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. Article 15
IRELAND. Article 15
CHANNEL ISLANDS. Article 15
TURKEY. Article 16
ROYAL GALLERY OF ILLUSTRATION. Article 17
THE WEEK. Article 17
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 20
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Recollections Of The Lodge Of Freemasons At Thornhill.

Wo stand to our Queen , to our Master we bend ; For these are the rulers wo are bound to defend ; And when such a Queen , such a Master arise , As Britons , as Masons , we ' ve cause to rejoice . Then since we're bound by secresy to unity and love , Lot us like brethren faithful to every brother prove ;

Then hand to hand we'll firmly stand , all Masons in a ring , Protectors of our native land , the Craft , and tho Queen . Thus the semi-centennial demonstration Avas ended ; but its happy memories Avill long keep possession of each participant ' s heart . As to the

clothing of No . 252 , in addition to the ordinary badge , its officers wear a silk collar . The distinctive colour used to be dark blue , but in 1851 green was adopted . Green is the colour of the ribbon and clothing of the Grand Lodge of Scotland ; it is also the emblematic colour of a Knight

of the Red Cross ( a degree conferred m encampments of Knights Templars ) , and of a perfect Master ( the fifth degree in the Ancient Scottish Rite ) . The Red Cross Kni ght is reminded b y . ^ . is colour that truth is divine attributeand

a , lhat , like the green bay tree , it "will flourish in perpetual verdure . Blue is the colour of the clothing" of the Grand Lodges of England and Ireland . It is Said to be the appropriate colour

of the first three degrees of Ancient Craft Masonry , and has been explained as emblematic of Universal friendship and benevolence , instructing us that in the minds of Freemasons these virtues should be as extensive as the blue arch of heaven

itself . We are not aware of the circumstances under which the Lodge of Thornhill discarded blue as the colour of its livery . There is no mention of the change in the minutes . . . .

There have been " greater and lesser lights " among the representatives of St . John ' s'in Grand Lodge . Its first Proxy Master was , as Ave have already indicated , Bro . John Maitland , accountant , who Avas Assistant Grand Clerk from 1821 to 1837

and Grand Clerk from 1837 till his resignation of that office on his removal to London in 1846 . He relinquished his proxy commission in 1847 , and was succeeded by another distinguished brother , John Deuchar of Morningside , for several years

Grand Bible-bearer in the Grand Lodge of Scotland . F . D . M'Cowan , M . D ., a brother of considerable eminence , proved , during the years 1852-4 , aAvorthy successor to the brethren named , and AvithdreAv from the post on his election to the chair of Mary ' s Chapel , No . 1 . He is an ex-Grand Deacon , and Representative in Grand Lodge

Recollections Of The Lodge Of Freemasons At Thornhill.

from the Grand Orient of Fiance . Judging from his Masonic antecedents , Bro . F . Barrow of GlasgOAY is Avell qualified Avorthilyto sustain the prestige of St . John ' s , of AA'hich he is the present Proxy Master .

Of the five hundred candidates who have crossed the tesselated border in the Lodge of Thornhill , more than one-tenth have been brought to light by the present R . W . M ., now completing his second year of service in that capacity . No previous

R . W . M . of St . John ' s has put his mark upon so many blocks as Bro . A . C . Hislop ; and his work will stand long after he has been translated to the Celestial Lodge ., His mark is the pentalpha , ov , endless triangle with five points .

Lecture On The Origin, Nature, Object, And Tendency Of Freemasonry.

LECTURE ON THE ORIGIN , NATURE , OBJECT , AND TENDENCY OF FREEMASONRY .

DELIVERED TO THE BRETHREN OF THE LODGE OF LIGHTS ( NO . 148 ) , WARRINGTON , AFTER THE S . W . HAD DONE HIS DUTY ON MONDAY , THE 25 TH DAY OE JUNE , 1866 . Bg Bro . H . B . WHITE P . M . and Treas ., 148 , Prov . G .

StevMrd , WestBancasUre , K . T . S . P . B ., > fc 8 re . Brethren : At our last meeting , I announced my intention of giving , this evening , a lecture on the orig in , nature , object , and tendency of Freemasonry . I Avould not , however , have you to >

suppose that , iu the short space of time availablefor the purpose , I can do more than give you a general outline of the subject , Avhich is practically almost inexhaustible . I originally intended to deliver the lecture in open lodge , but , having received an intimation that a portion of it might by

some be deemed too nearly allied to a religious discussion to be there admissible , I have deferred it until after the ordinary duties of the evening are ended . Firstly , then , as to the origin of Freemasonry , I

can tell you positively nothing , and in this respect I believe I am not singular ; all sorts of conjectures have been hazarded as to the foundation of the system , but none are capable of proof , and I much question Avhether , if it could be proved Avhen '

Masonry was instituted , it Avould not at once loseone of its principal charms ; it ought and practicallymust suffice us to knoAV that it is excellent in itself , and has existed from time immemorial . Some enthusiasts make the Craft coeval with creation , and state that Adam received it direct

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